Green party leader Nouripour, Chancellor Scholz (SPD), FDP leader Lindner and SPD leader Esken, in the background government spokesman Hebestreit on Sunday in Berlin
Image: Stefan Boness/Ipon
The second stress test was supposed to put an end to the debate about extending the lifetime of nuclear power plants. But now the traffic light is arguing on the open stage. A mood picture.
Wwho has lived in a flat share before, knows how it can work there. All night long, fraternizing over beer and ready-made pizza, arguments about the cleaning plan, dissolution after a long war – everything is possible. And always intense. Seen in this way, Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) left some room for interpretation when he welcomed leading politicians from his governing coalition as part of his “weekend flat share” on Monday evening. The Chancellor attended the summer party of the SPD newspaper “vorwärts” in Berlin. And there he also met the party leader of the Greens, Ricarda Lang, and the deputy leader of the FDP, Johannes Vogel. The SPD chairman Lars Klingbeil stood with them. The three should discuss with each other on the podium.
The “WG from the weekend” that Scholz spoke of was the coalition committee that had met or spent 22 hours from Saturday to Sunday in the Federal Chancellery. Sleepless in Berlin – Scholz was one of those who had put it down well, and so he raved, euphoric like a student after a night of partying, that they had “partyed together” and that “without a drop of alcohol”. The party guests Lang, Vogel and Klingbeil laughed and whispered; they had just whispered to each other and also to the Chancellor. This WG, it seemed, was having a good time.
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